The Hindu (Kolkata)

A chance to settle a constituti­onal clash

- Suhrith Parthasara­thy is an advocate practising at the Madras High Court

wo questions of seminal importance are at stake in Property Owners Associatio­n vs State of Maharashtr­a, which hearings recently concluded before a nine-judge Bench of the Supreme Court of India. First, what does the term “material resources of the community” used in Article

39(b) of the Constituti­on denote? Second, are laws made in furtheranc­e of the goal stipulated in Article 39(b) — that is, legislatio­n aimed at securing ownership of resources and distributi­ng them to best subserve the common good — immunised from challenges premised on the fundamenta­l rights to equality and freedom?

The second of these questions brings to sharp focus a clash between Part III of the Constituti­on, which delineates fundamenta­l rights, and Part IV, which enumerates a set of “Directive Principles of State Policy” (DPSP). The Constituti­on expressly makes fundamenta­l rights enforceabl­e, while DPSPs are regarded as goals that the state is expected to work towards. The tension between these parts has simmered through India’s history, reaching boiling point in the 1970s when the Constituti­on was routinely amended, primarily to make certain kinds of legislatio­n exempt from judicial review.

The Supreme Court has from time to time attempted to clarify where the law stands, starting with the verdict of its 13-judge Bench in

Kesavanand­a Bharati vs State of Kerala (1973). But the con›ict has never really gone away. The uneasy relationsh­ip between the two parts has now reared its head again. How the Bench in

Property Owners answers the reference made to it will have a deep bearing on the Constituti­on’s future course.

At its inception, the Constituti­on’s bare text was clear enough. Article 13 declared that any law made in breach of a fundamenta­l right would be void. Article 37, on the other hand, declared that DPSPs will not be “enforceabl­e in any court”. Yet, it said that its precepts would be treated as fundamenta­l in the country’s governance and the State would be obliged to apply them in making laws.

The Court in some of its earliest judgments described the hierarchy. Part III, wrote Chief Justice S.R. Das, in Mohd. Hanif Quareshi vs State of Bihar (1958), cannot be reduced to “a mere rope of sand”. He said, “the State should certainly implement the directive principles, but it must do so in such a way that its laws do not take away or abridge the fundamenta­l rights”.

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The introducti­on of Article 31C

This balance came unstuck when the Constituti­on was amended in 1971. Through the 25th amendment, Parliament, in a bid to place some of its laws beyond judicial review, introduced a new provision, Article 31C. This provision stipulated that a law giving e™ect to clauses (b) and (c) of Article 39 — which respective­ly entreated the state to make legislatio­n towards securing the material resources of the community and towards implementi­ng an economic system that does not result in concentrat­ion of wealth — could not be declared void on the ground that it violated the rights conferred by Articles 14 or 19. This meant that the laws so made were exempt from any challenge on grounds that they contravene­d the right to equality under Article 14 or one of the other of the bundle of freedoms contained in Article 19, including the rights to freedom of expression, and to profession, business, and trade.

Consider the consequenc­es: Parliament might believe that the printing press is a material resource of the community. It might then proceed to nationalis­e the media. The measure, it might say, is made with a view to securing the common good under Article 39(b). As an upshot of the 25th amendment, this law could neither be challenged on the ground that it did not subserve the common good nor could it be found void on the ground that it infringed our right to free speech.

Kesavanand­a alleviated some of these potentiall­y drastic results. Through a narrow majority of seven to six, with Justice H.R. Khanna’s controllin­g opinion tipping the balance, the Court found that an amendment which o™ended the Constituti­on’s basic structure would be void. Justice Khanna further found that the 25th amendment partially fell afoul of this theory. He held that to the extent that it forbade any examinatio­n on whether a law made was in furtheranc­e of Articles 39(b) and (c) it transgress­ed the principle of judicial review. But he upheld the amendment insofar as it protected such laws from challenges grounded on Articles 14 and 19. Oddly though, the six judges who otherwise formed part of the minority, by holding that Parliament had unlimited power to amend the Constituti­on, did not engage in any independen­t analysis on the 25th amendment. This meant that while a majority found a part of Article 31C void, Kesavanand­a o™ers no clear verdict on whether the amendment —insofar as it exempts certain laws from fundamenta­l rights challenges — otherwise breaches the Constituti­on’s basic features.

More changes

Despite this, in 1976, through the 42nd amendment, Parliament made further changes to Article 31C. These were even more far-reaching.

They stipulated that a law made in furtheranc­e of any DPSP — and not merely a law made in furtheranc­e of Articles 39(b) and (c) — would enjoy safe harbour.

In Minerva Mills vs Union of India (1980), a ve-judge Bench declared the amendment unconstitu­tional. The Court found that while DPSPs provided the ends of governance, fundamenta­l rights constitute­d the means to such ends. Articles 14, 19 and 21, wrote Chief Justice

Y.V. Chandrachu­d stood between the “heaven of freedom into which Tagore wanted his country to awake and the abyss of unrestrict­ed power”. This amendment, he added, “removed two sides of that golden triangle”.

But what is the precise consequenc­e of this ruling? Does Article 31C now go back to its original form, as contained in the 25th amendment, sans the portions that were struck down by the majority in Kesavanand­a? Or is it in a state of suspended reality, where its validity remains in the balance?

The issue is complicate­d by another judgment delivered by Justice Y.V. Chandrachu­d, on behalf of a ve-judge Bench in Waman Rao vs Union of India. Here, somewhat at odds with his own opinion in Minerva Mills, he held that the unamended Article 31C was valid, because it was impossible to conceive how a law made in furtheranc­e of Articles 39(b) and (c) could at all infringe the rights under Articles 14 and 19. This nding is clearly incorrect. As we saw, a law made to purportedl­y subserve the common good — for example, a nationalis­ing of the printing press — can have grave consequenc­es on our liberty.

In Property Owners, the Court will decide on the validity of a law that allows a State government board to acquire complete control over dilapidate­d buildings, if done with the consent of at least 70% of residents. To resolve this, it will examine whether the law furthers Article 39(b) under which it is purportedl­y made. But even assuming it answers this in the a¯rmative, the question still remains: can the statute also be tested on the touchstone of

Articles 14 and 19?

An opportunit­y

The top court has a chance, in Property Owners Associatio­n vs State of Maharashtr­a, to resolve the clash between fundamenta­l rights and Directive Principles of State Policy

Regardless of the judgments in Waman Rao and Sanjeev Coke vs Bharat Coking Coal (1982), which followed it, to date there is no conclusive analysis from the Supreme Court on Article 31C, in the form introduced by the 25th amendment, and its adherence to the Constituti­on’s basic structure. This has meant that fundamenta­l rights and DPSPs have been in perennial con›ict. The Court has a chance in Property Owners to resolve this clash and, in the process, provide a llip to the Constituti­on’s most cherished guarantees.

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